What we try to do here at NPR Music isn't that complicated. First and foremost, of course, we like to introduce readers and listeners to artists they may never have heard that will challenge, excite and soothe them. We also enjoy celebrating, reframing, revisiting and enlivening the music everyone already knows and loves, to give it a new life in a changed world. But another significant part of this project is to use music as a medium in order to decode our present moment — and maybe divine a little of the future from it. As you'll see below, we've done this across a range of mediums — video, illustration, photography, podcasts (of course), writing and mishmashes between all of them.We published over 3,100 articles on the site this year — below, you will find 30 of our favorite slices from all that work. The criteria was only that the piece say something important, hopefully in a striking and beautiful way, about the present moment and the lives being lived within it.There are reorientations of the popular music canon with women at its center (a project has continued long after that initial list was published), the mystery of a "missing" classic rocker, an illustrated tour of a teen-oriented music festival, a record collector who desires just one album, lullabies, re-examinations of masculinity in hip-hop, a group Austrians who bumbled their way to fame, a fake genre nobody asked for (but everyone needs) ... the list is long. And time well-spent.
Hard Living In The Big Easy: Housing Costs Push Musicians Out Of New Orleans
New Orleans is inseparable from the music that animates it. In this short video documentary, Nick Michael examines the toll of rising property costs on the city's living soul, and what that means for its own wellbeing.Nick Michael, February 2
Should Anyone Expect Pop Stars To Lead The Resistance?
Immediately following the inauguration, many began wondering if it would lead to a resurgence in politicized music. Using Lady Gaga's halftime show as a lens, Ann Powers warned us about where to look for it.Ann Powers, February 6
Even With Travel Ban Blocked, Artists Are Still Left Hanging
Even after President Trump's early and protest-initiating executive order on travel was paused, the confusion it sowed within and throughout the world's immigration and customs apparatus lingered on.Anastasia Tsioulcas, February 6
Jens Lekman Will See Himself Now
You don't often see the practicalities of an artist's life in typical magazine-style writing — things like how they afford to eat. Laura Snapes' intimate portrait of the romantic Swede Jens Lekman brings you there.Laura Snapes, March 1
A Life In Music: The Magnetic Fields' '50 Song Memoir'
If the best-of lists have been any indication, Stephin Merrit's typically ambitious (tracing 50 years of living, a song per year) but particularly honed album was seemingly forgotten by the year's end. At the time of its release it seemed a critical shoo-in, and Barry Walters captured its idiosyncrasies and many triumphs with a winking eye.Barry Walters, March 6
Sexism From Two Leading Jazz Artists Draws Anger — And Presents An Opportunity
Men say stupid things. Quite often. (Bono, most recently.) Sometimes these jaw-dropping idiocies can lead to productive analysis, as was the case with Michelle Mercer's humorous, amazingly not-exasperated piece addressing two jazz giants having put feet to mouths.Michelle Mercer, March 9
800 Copies: Meet The World's Most Obsessive Fan Of 'The Velvet Underground and Nico'
Obsession is interesting, but self-aware obsession is of a different cut altogether. Mark Satlof, a music publicist, inveterately vacuums up various versions of one of the century's most interesting albums, The Velvet Underground and Nico -- to the point where he's amassed a statistically significant percentage of all its known copies. Jem Aswad, March 11
Review: Mount Eerie, 'A Crow Looked At Me'
A Crow Looked At Me is a singularly devastating record — the thing most often said about it is that no one can believe it exists. It's spoken with wonder that Phil Elverum had the focus and fortitude to begin, much less finish, this document of the heartbreak he held following his wife's passing. Our own Lars Gotrich, who was acquainted with the late Geneviève Castrée, pivoted his review into a tender eulogy.Lars Gotrich, March 16
Escape The Noise: Watch 9 Lullabies From Austin
South By Southwest can be a torturous garbage fire of corporate synergy, tepid music and drunken shrieks if you don't plan your experience carefully. Our South X Lullaby series was intended to counterbalance this energy with quiet sessions in hidden places from emerging, talented people. It also has the effect of casting this unique city in a rarely seen light.NPR Music, March 24
Where Have All The Bob Seger Albums Gone?
Bob Seger left all that business stuff to his manager, Eddie "Punch" Andrews, who did not seem to care one lick about the vibrancy of his client's living legacy. His albums weren't on streaming services, sure, but physical versions were no where to be found either. (Small wonder, then, that not long after this deep investigation, the Motor City legend's music became available to stream.)Tim Quirk, March 29
Prince Without Permission
Prince was famously wary of the music business — but after he died, that wariness no longer cocooned his work. In this piece marking a year since Prince's death, Hasit Shah tries to reconcile the coming availability of the artist's unreleased music with the fact that it's likely not what he would have wanted.Hasit Shah, April 21
Looking For Women's Music At The Symphony? Good Luck!
What does it take to get your compositions played by major American symphony orchestras? A Pulitzer Prize would no doubt help... right? Deceptive Cadence and NPR Music classical editor Tom Huizenga spoke to composer Du Yun, the winner of 2017's Pulitzer for music, about some troubling statistics.Tom Huizenga, May 5
Perfume Genius Reveals The Doubts And Defiance Behind 'No Shape' Track By Track
Mike Hadreas writes and composes, as Perfume Genius, from a place of deep, softly defiant honesty. With No Shape, he was fully in command of his power and laser-attuned to his own way of seeing the universe. To read him explain how he came to his inspirations is sometimes as empowering as the result of them.Robin Hilton, May 5
How Did Toby Keith Get To Do A Concert In Saudi Arabia?
There is little doubt that Toby Keith, the unapologetically patriotic country singer, performing to a male-only crowd in Saudi Arabia's capital city, was one of the strangest concert bookings to have been made last year. Anastasia explains exactly how it came to happen.Anastasia Tsioulcas, May 22
Roséwave: 75 Songs To Kick Off A Faux-Luxe Summer
Roséwave was the tongue-in-cheek, all-inclusive, basic-as-needed genre a dedicated crew of NPR Music staffers semi-accidentally created in order to overlap their need for blush wine with their need to blast Haim. Long may the tide be in.Lars Gotrich, June 21
Margaret Moser, Queen Of Austin, Is Dancing In The Light
Margaret Moser decided to treat a terminal diagnosis as she had the rest of her life: with aplomb. The writer, groupie and essential piece of Austin's music spine welcomed her friends and colleagues to join her in remembering the times they had shared. Here, Patoski plumbs those times to portrait a true original.Joe Nick Patoski, June 22
Spotify Is Accused Of Creating Fake Artists — But What Is A Fake Artist?
We've read it a million times now — this was a year of shock, scandal, drama, upheaval and nausea. This was a comparatively low-stakes example of this trend, but it provided us the space to examine what the near-future of music may look like, for better and worse.Andrew Flanagan, July 12
The KLF's Greatest Protégés Didn't Really Know What Was Going On
This article was one of the funniest we published all year, done so to note the return of the quasi-merry British tricksters The KLF after more than two decades. Near the height of their fame — and they were impossibly famous — the pair wrote a facetious manual for those looking to top the charts as they had. They couldn't have predicted that an earnest Austrian band would follow it to the letter... and do the same.Jason Roth, July 20
A New Canon: In Pop Music, Women Belong At The Center Of The Story
This piece will no doubt be remembered as the most powerful, impactful thing that NPR Music published this year — perhaps ever. The essay is the kick-off to Turning The Tables, a project meant to reorient the popular music canon with female artists at its center. If you have a problem with the exercise, Ann no doubt pre-empted it here.Ann Powers, July 24
Why Black Boy Joy And Lil Uzi Vert's Melancholy Are All The Rage
Mainstream hip-hop has long placed a high value on reductive representations of aggressive masculinity. This year, as hip-hop was in the economic spotlight for many labels, a more nuanced expression approached center stage, too, from the emo-dirges of SoundCloud rap to the joyful homilies of Chance The Rapper.Rodney Carmichael, September 1
Civil Rights Icon Dolores Huerta: Tireless Rights Advocate — And Jazz Fan
One of the many things Alt.Latino excels at is sharing the joy of music — its host, Felix, possesses big ears and a powerful microscope, which he uses to sustain fascinating conversations like this one, about the celebrated activist Dolores Huerta's love of and history with jazz.Felix Contreras, September 13
'When You Gonna Get A Real Job?': Philip Glass And Devonté Hynes Compare Notes
Devonté Hynes is best known as the polymathic artist behind Blood Orange, a project that mines the decades past for sounds he re-washes in the present. Composer Philip Glass is, as you surely know, one of the 20th century's most celebrated artists. The pair are both inseparable from New York in the imaginations of their fans — here, separated by decades and nothing else, they talk about the common ground of creation.Tom Huizenga, September 21
Views From: Warped Tour's 23rd Year
For our "Views From" series, we asked illustrators to interpret their experiences at music festivals throughout the summer. This, one of our favorites from it, sees a former teenaged attendee of this annual paean to angst reinterpret it as an adult.Chelsea Beck, September 22
Hallelujah! The Songs We Should Retire
This was an idea whose time had come — much like the many songs addressed on this episode of All Things Considered. (Now that '90s alternative has begun to bleed onto classic rock radio, we'll need to revisit this idea soon.)Bob Boilen, October 10
The Lore Of Big Thief
Adrianne Lenker had a preternatural gift for music, lovingly nurtured by her family for years. However, with the release of Capacity this year, her band Big Thief seemed to have arrived fully formed, like a dandelion seed on the breeze. Here, Ben peels back the story.Benjamin Nadaff-Hafrey, November 9
As Always, Country Music Gently Reckons With Civic Tumult
The Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas massacre, in which 58 country music fans were gunned down, immediately prompted an evaluation of country music's often arm's-length relationship to politics. At this year's CMA Awards, the fit was awkward.Jewly Hight, November 10
To Be Rare, True And Free
Saba's music is as honest as, but maybe less precious than, his friend Chance the Rapper's. And while his songs are generating millions of plays, financial stability remains a work in progress. But artistic integrity is the name of this game. Here, a close, deeply touching look at the ascent of an independent artist in a brand-new age.Jenny Gathright, November 15
The Kids Of Bowery's Hardcore 'Matinee,' Then And Now
There's rarely a more fascinating where-are-they-now piece than this one. On the occasion of his new book, Drew Carolan asked his former portrait subjects to give us an update on a life lived in the shadow of New York and the community of hardcore.Drew Carolan, November 16
Within The Context Of All Contexts: The Rewiring Of Our Relationship To Music
Put your thinking caps on. Here, an examination of the no-taste perpendicularities that music streaming algorithms constantly serve us, contrasted with the economic realities of celebrated reissue labels like Numero Group and the newfound power of music supervisors. All attempt, with vastly varying degrees of success, to reframe and re-present the history of music.Ben Ratliff, November 27
The Prophetic Struggle Of Kendrick Lamar's 'DAMN.'
Kendrick Lamar's record was, by a landslide, the year's most-lauded. Some were initially confused by its sound, so distant it seemed from the density and musical erudition of To Pimp A Butterfly. That was, as we've learned, an underestimation of Lamar. Here, in a piece that goes well beyond DAMN., Rodney goes poking around salvation.Rodney Carmichael, December 12
And more worth reading:
- Meet The Producer Who Runs Her Opera Empire From A 2-Bedroom Apartment
- For The Inauguration, Trump's Music Picks Look A Lot Like Richard Nixon's
- David Axelrod, Musical Visionary And Historical Propellant, Remembered
- The Struggles Of Austin's Music Scene Mirror A Widened World
- Trap Music Keeps Atlanta On Hip-Hop's Cutting Edge. Why Can't The City Embrace It?
- Are We Witnessing The Beginning Of The End For Free Music Streaming?
- The J. Geils Band's Greatest Hit Illustrates A Strange, Transitional Moment In Pop
- After Coming Out As Gay, A Russian Violinist's New Reality
- By Any Name, Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda Was A Force
- This Was It: Inside The Whirlwind That Was The NYC Rock Revival
- Through My Sister's Eyes: Allison And Katie Crutchfield On Each Other's Music
- The Sod Of Music
- Kesha Walks Us Through Her 'Rainbow,' Track By Track
- Glen Campbell Made Me A Professional Guitar Player
- As Jazz Fest Looks At 50, What Keeps It Alive?
- Former Village Voice Editors And Writers Remember Its Outsized Impact On Music
- Houston's Jazz Envoys Describe A Vibrant Scene Deluged, And Worry For Its Future
- Mapping The Vast Influence Of Holger Czukay, Alchemist Of Krautrock Legends Can
- With Its 'No Dancing' Law Verging On Repeal, New York Legitimizes Its Nightlife
- Lido Pimienta On Winning The Polaris Prize and Getting Back To Work
- Shania Twain On Being Respected And Finding Her Voice 'Now'
- How 'Ashes To Ashes' Put The First Act Of David Bowie's Career To Rest
- 'There Is No Done': Gavin Rayna Russom On The Dialogue Between Creation And Identity
- A South African Superstar Says Farewell
- R.E.M. Reflects On 25 Years Of 'Automatic For The People'
- Meek Mill's Sentencing Generates Protest, Calls For Probation And Parole Reform
- 2,000 Women From Swedish Music Industry Sign #MeToo Letter
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